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Faculty Disclosure Richard M. Tempero, MD, PhD Dr. Tempero has listed no financial interest/arrangement that would be considered a conflict of interest. Laryngopharyngeal Reflux (LPR) Richard M. Tempero MD PhD Otolaryngology Omaha, NE Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Controversial topic Lack of objective evidence to substantiate the disorder No consensus option regarding appropriate management Conflicting results regarding the efficacy of LPR management Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Refers to the backflow of gastric contents into the throat Also called: extraesophageal reflux, gastropharyngeal reflux, supraesophageal reflux, atypical reflux, reflux laryngitis Differs from classical gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) often without heartburn Symptoms associated with LPR Hoarseness Dysphagia Throat mucus “lump” in the throat (globus) Cough and throat clearing Heartburn Normal laryngeal exam Anatomy of LPR Diagnosis LPR • History –most important • Laryngoscopy –often to exclude malignancy • Special Diagnostic Tests –pH testing Laryngeal Findings of LPR • • • • • • Erythema Posterior mucosal hypertrophy Diffuse or localized edema Pseudosulcus vocalis Ventricular obliteration Thick endolaryngeal mucus Larynges showing erythema, edema, partial ventricular obliteration Manifestations of LPR • • • • • Granulomas Subglottic stenosis Laryngeal cancer Laryngospasm Asthma/cough Laryngeal granulomas • Multifactorial: vocal abuse, throat clearing, intubation, LPR • Most granulomas resolve with anti-reflux therapy and prevention of further vocal trauma Subglottic Stenosis (SGS) • High rates of LPR in patients with SGS • In animal models, experimental reflux produces SGS Laryngeal carcinoma • Chronic inflammation leading to neoplastic changes • Increased incidence of LPR in laryngeal cancer patients LPR treatment options AAO-HNS • Lifestyle modifications • Dietary modifications • Medical therapy • Anti-reflux surgery LPR Conclusions AAO HNS • LPR is important in the evaluation and treatment of patients with throat complaints • The larynx and pharynx is very susceptible to reflux-related injury • Diagnosis of LPR is based on history, laryngeal findings, and pH monitoring (2 of 3 subjective, pH monitoring not done) • Treatment of LPR consists of lifestyle and dietary modifications combined with medical therapy (PPI modest benefit) • Reflux surgery is an option for patients with severe or refractory LPR (it does not work well) PPI may provide modest LPR symptom benefit • Proton pump inhibitor therapy for suspected GERDrelated chronic laryngitis: • a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. • Qadeer MA. and Vaezi, MF. • Pooled data 8 studies n=344: PPI=195, placebo=147 • Age 51 males, 55% followed 8-16 weeks • No statistical improvement in LPR symptoms • Am. J. Gastroentol. 2006. 101:2646-54. What to do • Lifestyle and diet • Period of observation 2 months prior to PPI • Consider PPI What we need to do Open mind –other causes of laryngitis Identify reliable objective measurements Well designed clinical studies